|
William
Utterback
William Utterback truly embodies the idea of a mentor. Anyone who shares
the privilege of his influence is fortunate.
Bill is one of the artists from American illustration’s golden
age who kept the traditional practice of drawing and painting alive
during the twentieth century. Bill studied at the Chicago
Academy of Fine Art before going on to study with Joseph Henninger
at The
Art Center in the 1940s, when art schools still taught traditional
drawing and painting. Best known as one of the pioneer illustrators
for Playboy in the 1970's, he is also the official
illustrator for Chicago’s
Second City drama group (their
building lobby is wallpapered with his work), and a great portrait
painter. I have the privilege of knowing
him as a committed mentor and a great guy.
I have always been impressed by Bill's selfless approach to teaching.
Bill gives of his time almost without limit, because he likes to. When
I was under his instruction, he would call me up with a list of things
he wanted to make sure I understood that had come to him throughout
the week, and we would talk for an hour about edges in painting.
I first met Bill as an undergraduate student at Wheaton College. I
wandered into the local DuPage
Art League, where our mutual interests
in caricature and portraiture drew us together.
Taking informal lessons from a former Playboy illustrator
while I was attending a private Christian university seemed taboo,
but the lessons
I learned were invaluable. Bill’s guidance filled
in a lot of holes in my understanding of drawing and painting at the
time. I learned the importance of a background, how to use a mirror,
and began the discipline of painting from life. I gained insight into
the long and tedious work to which a career artist is dedicated. Bill
introduced me the writings
of Andrew Loomis and inspired me with his appreciation for all things
John Singer Sargent.
Bill to this day often calls me up with a new insight into painting
that he is boiling over to share with me, to which I listen and still
learn things. His unending love for the effect of light in paint is
contageous, and he has just about the greatest sense of humor of anyone
I know.
|

My
Mentors
Ed Julian
Gary Fasen
Bill Utterback
Ron DiCianni
Jered Woznicki
Michael John
Angel
|
|
|